
Police officer, gunman among dead in New York shooting
Police did not immediately make details of the shooting public, but the source told Reuters that one of the four victims confirmed to have died was an off-duty New York Police Department officer. The three other victims known to have been shot to death were civilians.
Separately, the NYPD said on the social media platform X that the gunman had turned up dead.
Other news media outlets reported that the slain NYPD officer was working paid security detail for the building at the time.
New York Mayor Eric Adams said in a video message posted on X there were "multiple injuries" in the shooting.
A short time later, New York Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said on X: "At this time, the scene has been contained and the lone shooter has been neutralized."
The New York Post newspaper, citing law enforcement sources, reported a gunman wearing a bullet-resistant vest and carrying an AR-style rifle had opened fire inside the Park Avenue skyscraper, killing four people, including an NYPD officer, before turning the weapon on himself. The Post said six other people were injured.
At one point during the violence, the gunman had barricaded himself inside the office tower, possibly on the 32nd floor of the building, according to the Post.
CNN reported the police officer and three civilians were slain, in addition to the shooter.
Several news outlets, including CNN, the New York Post and NBC News, said the suspect was tentatively identified as a 27-year-old man from Las Vegas.
A photo of the suspect that CNN said was shared by police showing a gunman walking into the building carrying a rifle was published by a number of major news media outlets. Preliminary checks of the suspect's background did not show a significant criminal history, the report added, citing officials.
The skyscraper at 345 Park Avenue houses offices of a number of financial institutions, including Blackstone and KPMG, along with the NFL headquarters.
Authorities have said nothing about a possible motive for the shootings.
A large police presence converged on the area around the tower, according to Reuters journalists near the scene.
'I just saw a lot of commotion and cops and people screaming,' said Russ McGee, a 31-year-old sports bettor who was working out in a gym adjacent to the skyscraper, told Reuters in an interview near the scene.
The FBI said agents from its New York field office were also responding to provide support at the scene.

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Techday NZ
13 hours ago
- Techday NZ
Cyber scams soar in New Zealand as AI & crypto drive threats
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NZ Herald
2 days ago
- NZ Herald
A police officer and a Blackstone employee were among those killed during a shooting at a New York City high-rise
Police said the shooter killed four people, critically wounded another and then turned the gun on himself. Today, as details of the shooting at 345 Park Avenue and identities of the victims emerged, communities across the city expressed sorrow for the lost and wounded. Here are their stories. Didarul Islam, 36 A native of Bangladesh, Didarul Islam immigrated to the US before joining the NYPD as an officer three-and-a-half years ago, the department said. Islam was assigned to the 47th Precinct in the Bronx but was moonlighting as uniformed private security at 345 Park Ave. He was married with two young sons, New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told reporters, adding that Islam's wife is pregnant with the couple's third child. 'He was doing the job that we asked him to do,' Tisch said. 'He put himself in harm's way. He made the ultimate sacrifice, shot in cold blood, wearing a uniform that stood for the promise that he made to this city. He died as he lived: a hero.' New York Mayor Eric Adams praised Islam's service, saying the officer 'embodies what this city is all about'. 'He's a true-blue New Yorker, not only in the uniform he wore, but in spirit and energy of loving this city.' NYPD officers lined the streets of Manhattan to salute the transport vehicle carrying Islam's body. In the Bronx, Islam's death sent ripples through the borough's tight-knit Bangladeshi community – a slice of New York where the officer was often spotted at restaurants on Sterling Ave and walking to the Parkchester Islamic Centre. 'I used to see him a lot on the street,' said 29-year-old Tanjim Talukder. 'We used to walk to mosque together.' The men would talk about politics in Bangladesh, Talukder said. 'He was a friendly guy, humble. I feel so sad.' Abdul Salaman echoed Talukder's grief. Salaman knew Islam in Bangladesh, and the men stayed in touch as both eventually moved to the Bronx. 'We grew up together,' Salaman said. 'He was a very hardworking person.' 'They are very sad, everybody,' Salaman said after leaving the home where the officer lived with his wife and children. A NYPD vehicle sat watch outside. Across the street, at a primary school, a black gate stood decorated with blue and white roses, as well as a banner – emblazoned with a thin blue line American flag – calling Islam a 'loving parent and NYPD hero'. 'Heroes in their quiet grace/ Leave in our world, a brighter trace,' the poem on the banner read. 'Their legacy, a path to follow/In their footsteps, we find tomorrow.' Wesley LePatner, 43 A real estate investment executive with Blackstone since 2014, Wesley LePatner was remembered by friends and colleagues as kind, generous, and well-respected in her field. 'It's hard to put into words what a wonderful, beautiful, sweet, kind, and generous soul Wesley was. We will be there for the family, and we will never forget her,' Benny Rogosnitzky, a friend and congregant at LePatner's synagogue, said in a Facebook post. Blackstone in a statement said that LePatner was a wife and mother who embodied the best of the company, mourning her as a passionate and generous presence. In addition to her work with Blackstone, LePatner served on multiple philanthropic boards, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York, the Abraham Joshua Heschel School and the Yale University Library Council, according to her professional biography. The UJA-Federation in a statement said LePatner was 'extraordinary in every way – personally, professionally, and philanthropically'. Aland Etienne, 46 The security guard killed in the shooting in Manhattan was Aland Etienne, according to Manny Pastreich, president of 32BJ SEIU, one of New York's largest unions representing workers including security guards, doormen, and caretakers. Police said Etienne was shot while behind his security desk after a gunman burst into the lobby of the Midtown building. Pastreich in a statement described Etienne as a dedicated employee 'who took his job duties extremely seriously'. Etienne, Pastreich said, was 'a New York hero'. 'We will remember him as such.' Etienne's brother, Gathmand Etienne, wrote in a Facebook post that their family had been left 'shattered' by his killing – and asked for prayers and strength as they navigate the unbearable. 'He was more than a brother – he was a father, a son, and a light in our lives,' Gathmand Etienne wrote. 'Rest in peace, Brother. You'll never be forgotten,' he added. Julia Hyman, age unknown Julia Hyman, who graduated from Cornell University in 2020, was a warm, driven and passionate student, who left a 'lasting impression' on those around her, school officials said. She had just visited the campus this summer for a five-year reunion with her classmates. Hyman worked as an associate at Rudin Management, the company that managed 345 Park Ave. Hyman started her job in November, according to her LinkedIn page. In a statement today, the Rudin family described her as a 'cherished' colleague. Craig Clementi, age unknown Craig Clementi, an NFL employee who works in the league's finance department, was injured in the shooting, a person with knowledge of the situation said. His father-in-law, Robert Hunter, told the New York Daily News that Clementi 'was on his way home when he got shot'. He 'came through the surgery and there was some spinal damage', but he is 'doing well', Hunter said. Clementi is expected by doctors to recover from his injuries, according to a person familiar with the matter.


NZ Herald
2 days ago
- NZ Herald
Police say suspect drove from Las Vegas for days and ended his rampage in a real estate office
The workplace mass shooting was particularly shocking in the centre of New York City, where such attacks are virtually unheard of. Tisch said that Tamura's car was recorded passing through Colorado on Saturday local time, then Nebraska and Iowa on Sunday, before he arrived in New York City on Monday afternoon local time. He drove to Park Avenue, where he double parked his BMW just outside the skyscraper. He then marched inside with an AR-15-style rifle and began to spray the lobby with gunfire, peeking behind a security desk to shoot one of his victims and firing on another who tried to take cover behind a pillar. He then walked to the lift bank, waited for a lift to take him upstairs, letting a woman exit and walk safely past him before he got on and rode it to the 33rd floor. Once there, he went to the office of Rudin Management, a real estate firm, where he shot someone and then fatally shot himself in the chest. The police department said Tamura was from Las Vegas. Police vehicles blocked the entrances to the gated community where he was believed to have lived, and a street elsewhere in the neighbourhood was closed off with police tape and traffic cones. Public records indicate that Tamura spent at least part of his youth in California. Mason Thomas said he had played high school football with Tamura in Granada Hills, a neighbourhood of Los Angeles. But he said they had lost contact with each other years ago. Nevertheless, he said it was 'mind-blowing' to see an old high school teammate in the news for a fatal shooting spree. He said he remembered Tamura as a standout running back who was funny, popular, and agreeable. 'There was nothing from the little I knew about him that would have indicated anything like this,' Thomas said. 'At practice, there were never any issues I can remember. He never had issues with anybody.' In Santa Clarita, a city north of Los Angeles, Debi Hatfield, said she remembered the Tamura family well. They had been neighbours for a decade, and Shane and his brother played with her children and went to primary school with her daughter, she said. 'They were typical kids,' Hatfield said, looking across the quiet cul-de-sac at the family's former home, as crickets chirped in the cool night air. She said she remembered Shane 'as just a little kid following his older brother around. It's really shocking.' In recent years, Tamura had received traffic citations in Nevada and was charged with criminal trespass, records show. It was not immediately clear what had led to the trespassing charge. Records show that a person with the same name as Tamura held a work card issued by the state board that regulates security guards, private investigators, and similar professionals in Nevada from December 2019 to December 2024. The work card did not authorise the person to carry a firearm. It was not clear why Tamura was in New York City or what had motivated him to open fire inside the building, which is home to the offices of several high-powered companies, including investment giant Blackstone, the NFL, and accounting and financial advisory firm KPMG. It was the second high profile shooting in midtown Manhattan in less than a year. Last December, Luigi Mangione travelled to New York City from out of town and staged a targeted attack on a healthcare executive, Brian Thompson, in midtown, prosecutors say. This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Written by: Liam Stack, Joseph Goldstein and Amy Julia Harris ©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES